Inheritance

Cards (57)

  • What is DNA?
    A molecule containing genetic information
  • What is the structure of DNA?
    It has a double-helix structure
  • What are genes?
    Sections of DNA coding for proteins
  • Where is each gene located?
    At a specific position on a chromosome
  • What are chromosomes?
    Thread-like structures made of DNA and proteins
  • How many chromosomes do humans have?
    46 chromosomes (23 pairs)
  • What are autosomes?
    22 pairs of chromosomes that do not determine sex
  • What are sex chromosomes?
    The 23rd pair that determines sex
  • What chromosomes do females have?
    Two X chromosomes (XX)
  • What chromosomes do males have?
    One X and one Y chromosome (XY)
  • What are alleles?
    Different versions of a gene
  • What is a dominant allele?
    Only one is needed for the trait to show
  • How is a dominant allele represented?
    By a capital letter
  • What is a recessive allele?
    Shows in phenotype if two copies are present
  • How is a recessive allele represented?
    By a lowercase letter
  • What is a genotype?
    The combination of alleles for a gene
  • What is a phenotype?
    The physical expression of a genotype
  • What does homozygous mean?
    Having two identical alleles for a trait
  • What does heterozygous mean?
    Having two different alleles for a trait
  • What is monohybrid inheritance?
    • Inheritance of a single characteristic
    • Controlled by one gene with two alleles
    • Classic example: Mendel’s pea plants
  • How does a Punnett square work?
    • Parents’ genotypes placed along the top and side
    • Possible offspring genotypes filled inside the square
  • What is the genotype ratio for two heterozygous parents (Bb x Bb)?
    1 BB : 2 Bb : 1 bb
  • What is the phenotype ratio if B is dominant?
    3 with dominant trait : 1 with recessive trait
  • What are the sex chromosomes in humans?
    XX for females, XY for males
  • How is a child's sex determined during fertilization?
    Mother provides X, father provides X or Y
  • What are inherited diseases and disorders?
    • Genetic disorders inherited in specific patterns
    • Typically through dominant or recessive alleles
  • What is cystic fibrosis?
    A recessive disorder caused by allele f
  • Who will have cystic fibrosis?
    Only individuals with genotype ff
  • What are carriers of cystic fibrosis?
    Heterozygous individuals (Ff) without symptoms
  • What is the Punnett square outcome for two carriers (Ff x Ff)?
    25% chance of unaffected child (FF)
  • What is the chance of a carrier child from two carriers (Ff x Ff)?
    50% chance of a carrier child (Ff)
  • What is the chance of a child with cystic fibrosis from two carriers (Ff x Ff)?
    25% chance of child with cystic fibrosis (ff)
  • What causes genetic variation?
    • Mutations: Random changes in DNA sequences
    • Sexual reproduction: Unique combinations of alleles from parents
  • What is a mutation?
    A change in the DNA sequence of a gene
  • What are the types of mutations?
    Harmful, neutral, and beneficial mutations
  • What are harmful mutations?
    Causing genetic disorders or cancer
  • What are neutral mutations?
    Having no effect on the phenotype
  • What are beneficial mutations?
    Providing a survival advantage
  • What can cause mutations?
    Mutagens like UV radiation and chemicals
  • What is the importance of mutation in evolution?
    • Beneficial mutations lead to adaptation
    • Natural selection favors individuals with advantageous traits